Strategic Planning as an Iterative and Integrated Process NACUBO Conference September 22, 2014 2014 Plan A Advisors
Session Goals Through a case study of the Strategic Planning Process conducted with Pratt Institute, we will: 1) Learn some process techniques for surfacing difficult issues, and shaping a collective and inclusive vision. 2) Take home tactical planning tools that help generate and evaluate concrete outcomes, align plans with realistic implementation budgets, and empower people and teams to accomplish plan goals. 3) Learn an approach to prioritizing plan initiatives over a multi-year period, aligned with parallel institutional planning processes. 2
Pratt Institute Founded in 1887, Pratt Institute is a global leader in higher education dedicated to preparing its 4,600 undergraduate and graduate students for successful careers in art, design, architecture, information and library science, and liberal arts and sciences. Main campus in Brooklyn; secondary campus in Manhattan Five Schools: Fine Arts, Design, Architecture, Information & Library Sciences, Liberal Arts & Sciences 3149 undergraduates in 15 degree programs Undergraduate tuition: $42,866 80% of students receive $28.8M in Pratt unrestricted scholarships 1478 graduates in 19 degree programs 20+ study abroad programs 3
What Makes Colleges and Universities Different? 4
What Makes Colleges and Universities Different? Colleges/universities are large institutions, slow to change LARGE strategic planning commitees (18 at Pratt) Some characteristics of a college/university environment: Siloed departments, often with competing interests Faculty governance Annual budget based on enrollment & endowment performance Distanced board Organized labor 5
Our Approach with Pratt 18-member academic & administration committee + Highly inclusive process; listened to everyone; captured everything + 9-month planning period + Board committee + Frequent campus communications and prioritization came later 6
Planning 101 Basic elements of a strategic plan for a college/university: I. Mission your reason for being time to rethink? Or not? II. III. IV. Vision the impact you aim to achieve by the end of the plan Goals statements of expected outcomes think thematically; remember: you have to market your plan Objectives strategies for focusing and achieving your goals V. Tactics concrete steps delineated for each objective Who is responsible? How will you measure success? What will it cost? How long will it take? 7
Strategic Planning Timeline Staff Faculty Trustees Students Administrators Document Review (Month 1) Interviews (Month 1) Financial Academic Fundraising Governance Programmatic Strategic Planning Committee Roundtables (Months 2-3) Framework (Month 4) Committee Endorsement (Month 5) Staff Faculty Alumni Trustees Students Administrators Tactical Planning (Months 6-7) Board of Trustees Prioritization (Month 8) Adoption & Implementation (Month 9 - ) 8
Whom to Engage in the Process? 9
Whom to Engage in the Process? Administration Board Academic leadership Non-academic staff Research centers Students Alumni Community leaders Elected officials Major funders 10
Inclusive? Democratic? 11
The Planner s Toolkit: How to Give Voice to All Convene a committee that represents a diversity of stakeholders 1. Conduct research: Document review, interviews, roundtables, surveys Surface major themes: internal strengths and challenges; external opportunities and threats 4. Return to the committee to prioritize the plan and recommend its adoption by the Board of Trustees Communicate out! 2. Convert themes into a vision for the plan with associated goals 3. Return to key stakeholder groups to develop detailed objectives and tactics 12
Pratt Vision & Goals Pratt Institute is a world-leading creative learning community where students, faculty, staff and alumni envision and shape the future through cultural innovation. 1. Enriching the Academic Experience: deepen our traditional curriculum offerings with greater emphasis on cultural and technological innovation, inter-disciplinary collaboration, theoretical and applied research, and educational efficiency. 2. Expanding Horizons: increase interaction and academic opportunities within Pratt and beyond its gates to educate for a global future, raise Pratt s profile, enhance professional development, and embrace new ideas. 3. Creating Dynamic Environments: invest in our physical plant creative spaces and facility adjacencies in particular to support academic collaboration, to access creative resources, and to improve the quality of student life. 4. Building Capacity: modernize the Pratt business and academic models, promote a culture of transparency and collaboration, and improve Pratt s governance and fundraising infrastructure. 13
The Devil is in the Details: Developing Effective Tactics Use a grid that includes: timetable, responsible party, budget impact, source of funding, outputs and outcomes Give leaders responsibility to develop these 14
Achieving Buy-in and Ownership Use the strategic plan as a framework for departmental planning Give leaders responsibility, tied to accountability, for developing and implementing the plan Institute annual budget allocations for implementation Incentivize the whole community to participate in implementation: e.g. Pratt s Innovation Fund Revisit the plan annually Communicate success 15
Align with Other Planning Processes (& Consultants!) Strategic Plan Campus Master Plan Board Development Campaign Business Plans 16
Plans Are Made to Be Changed 17
Plans Are Made to Be Changed Assign specific responsibility for oversight Conduct regular reporting sessions Employ simple tools (such as Excel) to allow for updates Modify the plan as opportunities arise and conditions change 18
Modes of communication Serial campus-wide emails President s Cabinet updates Chair s Council meetings President s speeches Board packets Faculty updates Senate meetings Alumni newsletter Grant proposals Campus blog posts Website 19
What is the Relationship to Accreditation? 20
What is the Relationship to Accreditation? Accreditation informs, but does not drive, strategic planning; employ previous accreditation reviews to identify institutional strengths and challenges Ensure that strategic plan goals and objectives align with accreditation standards Ensure that outcomes and financial implications are identified for each objective Conduct ongoing assessment of strategic plan implementation Regularly communicate strategic plan progress internally and externally 21
Questions? Adam Gaynor Partner, Plan A adamgaynor@planaadvisors.com 917-923-4834 Evan Kingsley Partner, Plan A evankingsley@planaadvisors.com 917-929-8556 Edmund Rutkowski Vice President for Finance & Administration Pratt Institute ekow@pratt.edu 718-636-3784 22